Sure. That would be great.
I have one more question.
I will give this one to Dr. Charron. On metrics, how do we actually know sanctions are working? When we look at UN sanctions, which are mandated to include every country, as opposed to sanctions from the EU or the African Union, as Professor Eckert has stated, how do we know that our sanctions are working, and if it's not a broad-based global sanctioning regime, is there any point to it?
If a few countries have sanctions against one country or state but the sanctions can be overridden by other countries...for me, it has to be either all or none. If every country is involved, sometimes that's through the UN, and as Professor Eckert stated, UN politics are involved at the Security Council level. If you don't have a global regime to impact a state, then if you have smaller blocs, how would that work? Is there a reason for it, or is there any effectiveness?